Mine are too old, but after this and poor service from my local outdoor retailer, I am regretting my anachronistic view of ethical trade and tending towards Ebert's brand of mutually exploitive consumerism. Thanks for the tips Ebert!
C ya there...
Bruce

Proze - you are right about the recall aspect - I'm not blaming the locals for that (but my loyalty to WC has taken a knock...).
My gripe with my particular local retailer is that I ordered something which he then forgot about - I'll order from MMO in the future...
Its a kind of general feeling of letdown and I blame myself for being naive, gullible and old fashioned - I'll try to do better!

After waiting for almost a year for these rocks to be replaced I'm wondering if it's worth buying any Wild Country products again. The first excuse was something about the factory not being able to cope, then there was something about the factory moving then the check is in the mail. The reason the rocks was returned in the first place was something to do with the testing procedure and now i'm starting to wonder if i should trust equipment from Wild Country. Look to me like the company is battling and battling companies cut corners.

Nothing wrong with Wild Country gear. If you see the CE and/or UIAA stamp on any climbing product, it survived the best test on the planet. Sad that you have to wait so long tho, imports are a bugger sometimes.

But one ought not wait that long. I can't speak for Wild Country (nor anymore for anyone in fact) but I would expect the back log would take a while to clear, however because of the nature of this sort of product they should be able to "turn on the taps" and put them out faster, even if they have to use a vender to do so.